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Publication no. C-2004-0602-02R
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ARTICLE
Ultrasonic Investigation of the Effect of Mixing Under Reduced Pressure on the
Mechanical Properties of Bread Dough.
H. M. Elmehdi (1,2), J. H. Page (1), and
M. G. Scanlon (2,3). (1) Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of
Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3T 2N2. (2) Department of Food Science,
University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3T 2N2. (3) Corresponding
author. Phone: 204-474-6480. Fax: 204-474-7630. E-mail:
<scanlon@cc.umanitoba.ca> Cereal Chem. 81(4):504-510. Accepted December
4, 2003. Copyright 2004 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Mixing is critical to attainment of a desirable gas cell distribution in dough.
By varying mixer headspace pressure, changes in the mechanical properties of
dough were investigated as a function of the dough’s void concentration using
low frequency (50 kHz) ultrasonic techniques. For the mixer used, this allowed
the volume fraction of voids (phi) to be varied from approximately 0.01 to 0.08. The
ultrasonic attenuation of longitudinal waves increased linearly with increases
in phi. If, as reported, pressure reductions during mixing decrease the number
density of the voids but do not affect void size, the change in attenuation is
proportional to the number of voids. By contrast, the velocity of longitudinal
ultrasonic waves decreased dramatically with increasing phi in the range 0.012
< phi < 0.03, dropping from a value near that of water to values well below
the velocity of sound in air. At higher phi, the velocity decrease was less rapid.
The longitudinal elastic modulus determined from these ultrasonic results shows
that the mechanical properties of the dough are sensitive to the presence of gas
bubbles. At low void fractions, the elastic behavior of dough is also influenced
by changes in dough matrix properties.
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